The site's consensus reads: A "Secret is poignant, sad, and beautifully crafted, featuring fine performances that stave off a drift toward soap opera territory". On review aggregator website Rotten Tomatoes, A Secret has an approval rating of 80% based on 45 reviews, with an average rating of 7.00/10. Won: Grand Prix des Amériques (tied with Ben X).Nominated: Best Writing - Adaptation (Nathalie Carter and Claude Miller). Nominated: Best Production Design (Jean-Pierre Kohut-Svelko).Nominated: Best Music Written for a Film (Zbigniew Preisner).Nominated: Best Editing (Véronique Lange).Nominated: Best Director (Claude Miller).Nominated: Best Costume Design (Jacqueline Bouchard).Nominated: Best Cinematography (Gérard de Battista).Nominated: Best Actress – Supporting Role (Ludivine Sagnier).Nominated: Best Actress – Leading Role (Cécile De France).Won: Best Actress – Supporting Role (Julie Depardieu).Mathieu Amalric as François Grimbert (age 37).Patrick Bruel as Maxime Nathan Grinberg/Grimbert.Cécile De France as Tania Stirn/Grimbert.His parents have never fully recovered from the trauma and eventually they both commit suicide. His parents' first spouses and his half-brother Simon were arrested by the Nazis and gassed at Auschwitz. His parents were each married to someone else before the Holocaust, and his father had a son, Simon. Eventually he learns that his family is Jewish. François knows that his parents met sometime around the war, and he imagines their courtship and marriage in the shadow of atrocities which nobody talks about any more. Simon is the big secret, but the discovery opens the door to further revelations and deeper enigmas. Only gradually does he learn of his parents' tragic past and that he had a sibling – a half-brother named Simon, his father's first son. For a while, he dreams of a stronger, fitter, more charismatic older brother to compensate for his own feelings of inadequacy. He is the skinny, sickly son of two marvelously athletic parents, Tania ( Cécile de France) and Maxime ( Patrick Bruel). François Grimbert (played as a young boy by Valentin Vigourt and as an adult by Mathieu Amalric) grows up in Paris in the 1950s. The film follows Maxime Nathan and his family in France during the years before and after World War II.
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